I was talking to a schoolfriend in about 1988 - both of us were interested in electronic music. I said that it would be cool if a synthesiser could automatically recreate a sampled sound. My friend said that a Fairlight could do it (he was a BIG fan of Fairlights...!). So cool to see is actually begin to happen. Best wishes from Birmingham UK.
I can imagine that in a Faker/EXE song, recreating real instruments with Synplant 2 could really be good for making something that sounds real but "wrong".
damn what a way to think of it in an FNF way lmao I was thinking of using the cat one to try to make some sorta funk fakeout lmao but damn your idea sure fits lmao
7:38 that was absolutely awesome and amazing man what do you mean is goofy man it was so fire and banger really I wasn’t expecting that you will make it masterpiece man it was so awesome really🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥✨✨✨✨✨✨
After watching your first Synplant video I immediately downloaded the trail and used he software. Its a total game changer for creative sounds. Thank you for the inspiriation!
it is good in generating fresh and new sounds which are not there today, but it is far off recreating the original sample. It just generates something which sounds a bit from far like it. But it is good for creating tracks with a new palette of sounds since the current industry is full of tracks using the same presets or standards.
I have an idea for you: What if you use ai voices to make an ai acapella song. I don't mean to only have the vocals of a song, I mean more like a "Don't Worry Be Happy" kind if situation.
So let’s say you wanted a certain synth sound say from the 80s. And you wanted that sound specifically to use In your song. Would you take a clip from the song itself? Or would you have to find the sound standalone first? Because it seems like you would need to already have the sounds to be able to make the sounds. Like if you really like a sound from a song you would actually have to get the sample first to recreate the sample?
This video is very interesting. I would like to know what ingredients does Synplant2 have at its disposal? Is it combination of sines, triangles, squares, with modulation, or is there more?
Hey, for your reactions I highly recommend "Welcome to your nightmares" by TeamHeadkick. It's a fantastic fnaf song, and a classic that I don't see a lot of people giving it love it deserves!
You need to check the comments in your previous video, someone told you how to use this properly with picking an iteration and going further, the whole point on synplant is evolution so i dont think you are quite using this properly